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1979 Quotes

Quotes tagged as "1979" Showing 1-9 of 9
David Markson
“Coincidences undeniably imply meaning.

I am rereading Hart Crane.
I notice the date
On which he stepped off that boat
Was April 26.

Tomorrow is April 26.

The year of his suicide was 1932.
I was four.
I am now fifty-one.
One undeniable implication in this case then
Is that the year, today,
Is 1979.

Afterward, Crane鈥檚 mother scrubbed floors.
Eventually, I may or may not
Jump overboard.

Are there questions?”
David Markson, Collected Poems

Christopher Hitchens
“It would not be an exaggeration to say that the land question in Zimbabwe is the single most decisive one.”
Christopher Hitchens, Inequalities in Zimbabwe

Mark Barrowcliffe
“I was petrified of making a mistake鈥攈ead-banging to the wrong song or not hard enough, or thinking a guitar solo was over when it wasn't. A rule of thumb is that if the guitar solo is by Led Zep or Lynyrd Skynyrd then it's not over. Ever.”
Mark Barrowcliffe, The Elfish Gene: Dungeons, Dragons And Growing Up Strange

Michael   Lewis
“Had Volcker never pushed through his radical change in policy, the world would be many bond traders and one memoir the poorer.”
Michael Lewis, Liar's Poker

Michael   Lewis
“Before Volcker鈥檚 speech, bonds had been conservative investments, into which investors put their savings when they didn鈥檛 fancy a gamble in the stock market. After Volcker鈥檚 speech, bonds became objects of speculation, a means of creating wealth rather than merely storing it.”
Michael Lewis, Liar's Poker

Douglas Adams
“A hist贸ria de todas as grandes civiliza莽玫es gal谩cticas tende a passar por tr锚s fases distintas e identific谩veis: a da Sobreviv锚ncia, a da Interroga莽茫o e a da Sofistica莽茫o, tamb茅m conhecidas pelas fases Como, Porqu锚 e Onde.
Por exemplo, a primeira fase 茅 caracterizada pela pergunta "Como vamos comer?", a segunda pela pergunta "Por que comemos?" e a terceira pela pergunta "Onde vamos almo莽ar?".”
Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker鈥檚 Guide to the Galaxy

R.J. Intindola
“Some of my greatest sense of accomplishments is making something happen when I鈥檝e been told 鈥渋t will never happen.”
R.J. Intindola, Rising From the Bottom
tags: 1979

Robin Jenkins
“There has been some talk (but not enough) about the political and social consequences of the devolution fiasco three years ago, but none at all about the cultural consequences. At the time my friends were startled and mystified when I told them what a blow the result had been to me, not as a person but as a novelist who thought his mission was to portray the Scottish people. I could not see how any writer could portray with enthusiasm and conviction a nation that had so little faith in itself as to reject a modest degree of self-government or, to put it more accurately, to let itself be cheated by a piece of parliamentary chicanery. In Canada I could hardly get anyone to believe me when I explained the 40% condition.”
Robin Jenkins, The Scottish Review: Arts and Environment 27

Neal Ascherson
“I was tidying old papers when I came across a faded "1979" folder. Remember what a bad year that was for those who believed in a self-governing Scotland? In March, a referendum for a "Scottish Assembly", its terms skewed to ensure failure. Then a General Election which slaughtered the SNP down to a mere two MPs and brought Mrs. Thatcher to power. End of a dream?

Two things fell out of the folder. One was a giant paper rosette, all blood-red tartan and ribbons, inscribed "Have yourself a Dreich Decade!" The rosette came from irrepressible Murray Grigor, whose films and happenings still teach Scots to find self-confidence through self-mockery. Get a grip, he seemed to be saying, and you can turn these dreich 1980s into what they did in fact become - the most intense eruption of Scottish literature, drama, painting and history publication for a hundred years.

The other thing was a note from Tom Nairn. It began: "Dear Neal, the incorrigible optimist strikes again...”
Neal Ascherson